Month: December 2009

2009 was a big year for MMORPGs, even if you can’t pinpoint a single game that defined the entire year. There was certainly more than enough going on to fill up a solid year of discussion, and if you want a brief recap of the year’s hottest MMO stories, I suggest you read this two-part article.

I began this year primarily playing WAR and writing for WAAAGH!, but neither would last for long. Bio Break quickly became my blog o’ choice, as I wanted to branch out into discussing the MMORPG world at large, and I’m certainly glad I did so. I don’t think I’ve ever had a year where I’ve played so many MMOs, met so many terrific people online or had so much fun as this one, and for me personally, 2009 was the year that gave me permission to stop being a monogamous gamer and go where the gaming was good.

So I wanted to end 2009 by going through my year in gaming and blogging.

iPhone Games

In June, my brother-in-law gave me his old iPhone 3G (he’d upgraded to the new model) and I discovered the sheer joy of this techno-Swiss army knife.

Although the app store is simply loaded with games, I’ve found myself to be a bit picky in what I want from the platform — it has to be quick to pick up and put down, work well with the interface (I really wish the device had a physical D-pad), and be worth my time. This boils my game list down to the following:

Dungeon Hunter – A generic but wonderfully-done Diablo clone

Desert Chronicles – A tower defense/RPG hybrid that I still play months after downloading

Peggle – Because… it’s Peggle

Bloons TD – I love Bloons, but its reliance on cannons over all else has dampened my enthusiasm of this title

Civilization Revolutions – Civ in a pocket format

Skee-Ball – Dude, it’s SKEE-BALL

Star Hogs – I loved me some Scorched Earth back in the day

Single-Player PC Games

As I’ve long since moved away from console gaming, so am I starting to drift far away from single-player computer titles. Even though many of them are fun, there’s something about the persistence and connectivity of MMOs that makes me miss them when they’re not there.

I spent a chunk of the year deep in BioWare’s domain — KOTOR, Mass Effect and Dragon Age all commanded weeks of my time, and were well worth it. Dragon Age wasn’t quite the be-all, end-all gritty fantasy experience I’d hoped for, but it was excellent, and I hope to go back and finish it some day.

Torchlight… I’m still divided on this. It’s a decent diversion, but it never really hooked me, and I was a bit turned off by its FATE 2.0-ness. I do need to go back and give it more of a fair shake, tho.

Games I have on deck that I’ve yet to try — Majesty 2, Borderlands, Tropico 3.

MMORPGs

I’ve probably annoyed a few of my readers by MMO hopping, particularly when I’ve left a game that they care about for one they did not. In my defense, I’m not suffering from gamer ADD or WoW tourism syndrome or whatnot — I just had the urge this year to explore, to play new and old titles that seemed fun and appealing, and I wanted to get as broad of a base of experience for writing about MMOs in general. I don’t see 2010 as being any different, to be honest.

So what are the titles I’ve dipped my toes in — or dove deep into — this year?

Warhammer Online – I began the year in WAR, but even back in January I knew that my time in the game was coming to an end. It simply did not have what I was looking for in a MMO, and it never felt quite right. I think that WAR is one of the biggest disappointments in my gaming career, because I had such high hopes for it, and because it really had so much promise and potential.

City of Heroes – Yes, I actually played CoH a bit earlier this year, partially because I was looking forward to Champions, and partially because I just missed the simplicity of the combat/missions grind. Fun and amusing, it wasn’t to be for very long.

World of Warcraft – I played a month of Wrath then canceled my account, to what I publically declared to be the last time. Which it wasn’t, so egg on my face. Due to a great guild, the dungeon finder tool and a more laid-back approach to the game, I’ve found myself in Azeroth once more.

Lord of the Rings Online – 2009 was the year that I gave LOTRO its second big chance, and ironically, it ended up just like the first. I had a great time, enjoyed the Captain class, found a terrific guild, and simply burned out somewhere in the middle of North Downs. I like the game, but the setting and feel of it just isn’t *me*, which is one of those personal things that can never be resolved on Turbine’s end. Speaking of Turbine…

Dungeons and Dragons Online – I hadn’t planned to play this, period, except for the announcement of the free to play version that got me thinking about DDO again. And once back in the game, I found that there’s a lot to love and admire about this quirky, unique MMO. While I’m not in it at the moment, I won’t hesitate to recommend it, especially since it costs you nothing for a good chunk of the content.

Free Realms and Wizard101 – Both of these I played and tried to get my wife into; both of these were too “kiddy” in tone for a long-term stay.

Champions Online – Had high expectations for this following City of Heroes, which were not met. CO is an odd bird to me — I will stand by my statement that it’s a fun game with great combat, but it’s also shallow as all get out, far too linear and suffered a plague of embarrassing snafu’s in the first month.

Fallen Earth – Need I go into much detail here? Hooked me after a great deal of positive word-of-mouth testimonies, and I agree with them all — this is a rough-and-tumble MMO that earns its stripes with a fantastic setting, deep gameplay and rewarding crafting.

Guild Wars – I had a copy of this sitting around, and I was determined to really get back into this game. Unfortunately, my time restrictions forced my attention elsewhere, and my general feeling was that I’d rather start fresh with GW2 than plow through the first.

En Kankluzion

With no huge WoW-like breakout hit in 2009 (or 2008 for that matter), it’s easy to casually dismiss this year as so-so for MMO gaming. Except that that does disservice to huge breakout hits like Free Realms, the growing success of EVE Online and Wizard 101, the more-than-adaquate subscriber base of Aion and Champions, and the thriving indie titles such as Darkfall and Fallen Earth. It was a year that many spent eagerly anticipating titles that are still yet to come (TOR, Cataclysm, GW2, Star Trek), a year in which we saw many projects canceled and MMOs close, a year plagued with layoffs and debate and controversy, but it never was one thing.

Yesterday I had the pleasure of recording a fun quick podcast with the folks over at Massively, which you can listen to (if you can stand the grating tone of my voice) over here on Massively Speaking!

We had a great time discussing 2009 in review, as well as our thoughts and predictions for the new year. Another prediction? MMOs will dispense corn dogs straight to your home via the iCorn iDog attachment!

Several sites and blogs have reported on this incredible end-of-the-year sale over at Steam, a sale which includes a huge amount of MMORPGs (and other titles) being handed out at incredibly reduced prices. This sale runs through January 3rd, so if you didn’t get a good present under the Christmas tree this year, there’s no reason you shouldn’t shell out a few bucks to treat yourself to something fun in the new year!

The best deals here are MMOs going for the low, low price of $5, including:

EVE Online: Dominion

Vanguard

Pirates of the Burning Sea

EverQuest II: The Shadow Odyssey

EverQuest II: Starter Pack

Lineage

If there’s nothing in that list to float your boat, they’re also offering Champions Online for $10, the whole Star Wars Galaxies package for $10, City of Heroes Architect Edition for $10, Age of Conan for $13, and (my personal favorite) Fallen Earth for $25.

Personally, I’m really tempted to pick up EQ2 — $5 for the starter pack would get me the game and a month’s worth of play time to satisfy my curiosity of this title. Even if I don’t play it, hey, it was just $5.

Direct2Drive is also offering a number of sales, but nothing as insane. They do have Warhammer for $20, which I didn’t see pop up on Steam.

“[Gearscore] then tallies up all the points to assign a player a gearscore – a handy little number with which your total gear picture, and unfortunately skill, knowledge of the game, and general worth to humanity are all assessed.”